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ORDINANCE NO. 299 <br /> CITY OF ORONO <br /> HENNEPIN COUNTY,.MINNESOTA <br /> AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE CODE OF ORDINANCES <br /> PERTAINING CHAPTER 78 FOR AMENDMENTS THROUGHOUT THE CHAPTER <br /> THE CITY COUNCIL OF ORONO ORDAINS: <br /> SECTION 1. Section 78-5 shall be amended by deleting the strikethrough text to read as <br /> follows <br /> Sec. 78-5. Purpose. <br /> (a) Guiding principles. <br /> (1) The city is growing in population from a rural agricultural community to a rural <br /> residential community. Use of land for residential purposes is considered primary with <br /> other uses viewed as supporting this use. While present commercial or industrial <br /> activity, where consistent with residential use and other guiding principles, will be <br /> protected by ordinance or conditional use permit, it is not the intention to expand or <br /> allow all such commercial or industrial activity to a degree where it conflicts with the <br /> primary residential use and the other guiding principles. The continued use of land for <br /> farming and similar purposes will be protected by ordinance or conditional use permit <br /> where sufficient acreage allows such use to continue without conflict with expanding <br /> residential use. <br /> (2) The maintenance of open space and the avoidance of overcrowding of land is a basic <br /> guiding principle in this plan. In addition to avoiding the ill effects of excessive, <br /> intensive land development, it is the policy to also avoid the threat to public health <br /> which occurs with excessive crowding of private sewage disposal systems on <br /> substandard building sites. <br /> (3) The city has recognized that many of the open space policies which have previously <br /> provided the basic direction of the land use policies have proven to be inadequate. It is <br /> now clear that on-site disposal systems must not be allowed on any site of less than <br /> two acres. It is now clear that the physical characteristics of the city make the <br /> extension of public services such as sewer extremely expensive and almost impossible <br /> in some areas. The city and other governmental agencies have learned that the <br /> premature development of open areas can be costly and disastrous to the environment. <br /> (4) Of paramount importance to the citizens of the city and to the citizens of the <br /> metropolitan area is the preservation of Lake Minnetonka and the wetlands that <br /> provide the only practical system of filtration and purification of the stormwater so <br /> vital to the preservation of Lake Minnetonka and the groundwater supplies in the area. <br /> The disastrous effects of intense residential and commercial development within the <br /> Page 1 of 21 <br />